2.17.14

In this edition of the Daily Wildcat: Career change for dean, Bad Omen: No. 2 Arizona’s 69-66 double overtime loss at arch rival ASU could be the first of many unless it improves offensively, Woody Allen embroiled in controversy

THE DAILY WILDCAT
Printing the news, sounding the alarm, and raising hell since 1899
DAILYWILDCAT.COM
MONDAY, FEBRUARY 17, 2014
SPORTS - 6
SOFTBALL
BLOWS OUT NO. 4
ALABAMA
SPORTS - 6
BASEBALL WINS
OPENING SERIES
WITH ROUT
VOLUME 107 • ISSUE 97
Career change for dean
BY STEPHANIE CASANOVA
The Daily Wildcat
In an effort to help realize the UA’s academic
strategic plan, the dean of the UA College of
Medicine — Tucson was recently appointed to two
new positions.
Dr. Steve Goldschmid will start his new
appointments as associate vice president for
clinical affairs at the Arizona Health Sciences
Center and vice president of physician services
for the University of Arizona Health Network on
March 3. Dr. Joe G.N. “Skip” Garcia, UA senior vice
president for health sciences, will serve as interim
dean of the UA College of Medicine — Tucson.
In his new positions, Goldschmid will focus
on communication in clinical delivery, efficiency
UA alum’s
product
may aid
studying
and productivity at the UA Colleges of Medicine
in Tucson and Phoenix, Garcia said. Goldschmid
will also improve how the Health Sciences Center
interacts with individuals in the community and
seek opportunities to set up new clinics, Garcia
added.
“The success of the Arizona Health Sciences
Center is really dependent on the success of the
health network,” Garcia said.
He said if the health network delivers better
care, it will enhance the academic mission of the
university.
Never Settle, the UA’s strategic academic plan,
focuses on partnership and engagement in the
community, as well as on providing students with
hands-on learning opportunities.
“I think in the next six months, Dr. Goldschmid
will have a significant impact on the care delivery
that we’re talking about,” Garcia said. “I think all of
these will make us very much stronger and more
accomplished also on a very steep trajectory to
achieving some academic success.”
The new positions were created as a response
to leadership needs at the UA’s clinical programs,
according to George Humphrey, assistant vice
president of AHSC’s office of public affairs. Having
these leadership positions is common at academic
health centers in the U.S., Humphrey added.
“We’re very pleased that Dr. Goldschmid has
accepted this position, for he has great strength in
clinical programs and clinical practice operations,”
Humphrey said in an email statement. “He has
NEW POSITION, 3
MEN’S BASKETBALL
BAD OMEN
No. 2 Arizona’s 69-66 double overtime loss at arch rival ASU
could be the first of many unless it improves offensively
BY ELIZABETH EATON
The Daily Wildcat
ARTS & LIFE - 10
WOODY ALLEN
EMBROILED IN
CONTROVERSY
OPINIONS - 4
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Energy drinks aren’t the only way
to stay up and study.
Tyler Johansen, the president of
Brainiac Supplements and a UA
alumnus, said he first got the idea
for creating a healthy supplement
to improve cognitive function when
he struggled to focus during his four
years here.
“When I was here at the UA, I
started buying supplements one by
one, just the individual ingredient,
and tried to figure out what would
help me concentrate in class,”
Johansen said.
Johansen partnered with Mahdi
Pessarakli, the medical and marketing
director of Brainiac Supplements, to
refine a formula packed with vitamins
and herbs to help improve memory,
concentration and focus. The two
began marketing their product,
which they named Study Buddy, to
college campuses across Arizona and
California.
“Every major university between
Tucson and Los Angeles carries the
product,” Johansen said. “Every Circle
K in Arizona and Nevada carries the
product, and we sell a bunch online
nationwide.”
Since the product’s launch
four years ago, the number of
consumers using it has rapidly
increased. Pessarakli said he would
conservatively estimate that about
1,000 students on each campus that
sells Study Buddy actively use it.
Johansen and Pessarakli said they
are hoping to increase Study Buddy’s
reach by not only expanding to other
colleges, but also by creating products
similar to Study Buddy that target
other age groups.
“We’ve got a senior formula, a baby
boomer geriatric formula coming
out,” Johansen said. “We’ve got a kids
version coming out. We’ve talked
about an infant type of deal and a few
other formulas, all-around cognitive
function.”
The product targeting children
would be intended to optimize
pediatric
development,
so
children could learn appropriately
and enhance overall classroom
performance. A version of Study
Buddy for mature adults would try to
help optimize brain function.
“The broader vision of the company
is to become a development group
DAILYWILDCAT.COM
STUDY BUDDY, 3
REBECCA MARIE SASNETT/THE DAILY WILDCAT
ARIZONA RESERVES watch the last few seconds of regulation of the Wildcats’ 69-66 double overtime loss to ASU at Wells Fargo Arena
on Friday. Arizona has struggled offensively during its last four games and the bench scored no points against ASU.
BY JAMES KELLEY
The Daily Wildcat
T
EMPE, Ariz. — The old
saying goes, “Defense wins
championships,” but in most
sports, including basketball, the
team that scores the most points
wins.
If No. 2 Arizona men’s basketball
doesn’t fix its offensive woes, it’ll be
in for a short NCAA tournament
run. The Wildcats have had
problems making free throws all
year, and now they have to worry
about scoring in the run of play.
“Our offense is continuing to put
more and more pressure on our
defense,” head coach Sean Miller
said. “You can only guard so well.
We missed a ton of free throws, and,
heck, we missed a ton of free throws
all year. Eventually, it’s going to run
its course, and you’re going to lose
because we’re leaving too many
points on the table.”
The Wildcats only managed
66 points despite playing 10 extra
minutes in their loss at ASU.
Yes, the referees did not call
technical fouls on ASU for throwing
objects on the court, storming the
court early, allowing their bench to
run into the court early or hanging
on the rim on the last score, but
officiating has never been the Pac12’s strong suit.
It’s also been established that
rushing the court early is perfectly
acceptable in the Conference of
Champions.
The reason Arizona lost is
MEN’S BASKETBALL, 6
QUOTE TO NOTE
“
The Olympics are supposed
to be a celebration of
athletic talent and ability,
not a double-edged sword
to hurt, shame or exploit its
female participants.”
OPINIONS — 4
The Daily Wildcat
While people may be hesitant to admit how
many sexual partners they’ve had, many UA
students said they don’t think it matters. There
may, however, be some social assumptions tied
to the question of how many partners a person
has had.
Jill Verbridge, a nurse practitioner at Campus
Health Service, said the questionnaires people fill
out when getting tested for sexually transmitted
diseases ask how many sexual partners the
person has had because having more partners
can lead to a higher risk of having an infection.
The answer to that question doesn’t change
the testing process or the prevention education
people receive when they get tested. It’s more
important that people are smart about using
protection when having sex, regardless of the
number of partners they choose to have sex with,
Verbridge said.
“It only takes one,” Verbridge said. “It matters if
people are protecting themselves or not.”
Being familiar with a partner and their sexual
history also helps reduce the risk of getting STDs,
she added.
According to Campus Health Service, in 2013,
70 percent of UA students reported being sexually
active that school year, and 4 percent of students
reported having six or more partners in a year.
Nathan Maynard, a pre-business freshman,
said having had a lot of sexual partners isn’t a huge
deal and shouldn’t matter because it’s a personal
choice. There is, however, a double standard in
how society views what’s OK regarding how many
sexual partners a woman has compared to how
many a man has, Maynard added.
“[Society wants] women to be … virgins
until they’re married,” Maynard said, “but they
want men to be out there all the time getting it
NUMBER, 3
2
FIVE
BY STEPHANIE CASANOVA
9
FOUR
eleven
14
15
13
ONE
7
eight
19 / 10
86 / 61
72 / 52
70 percent of UA students report being sexually active;
more sexual partners can lead to risk of infection
THREE
Eric, Canada
Phillip, Australia
Flynn, Texas
LOW
What’s your number?
twelve
ten
CLOUDY
84
50
six
HI
nine
WEATHER
GRAPHIC BY JESSIE WEBSTER
Monday, February 17, 2014 • Page 2
ODDS & ENDS
BEAT
OFF
HOROSCOPES
Compiled by: Tatiana Tomich
twitter.com/dailywildcat
Today’s Birthday (02/17/14). You’re growing
stronger this year, physically, emotionally and
spiritually. Tune your healthy diet and exercise
practices for optimal performance. Stay true to
your dreams for profit and satisfaction. Pursue
creativity and fun to new (possibly exotic)
destinations. A spring renovation sets the stage for
romance around the June eclipse. Play with kids
and grow younger. Share the love.
To get the advantage, check the day’s rating: 10 is
the easiest day, 0 the most challenging.
Aquarius (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) —
Today is an 8 — Take extra care
and get the job right the first time.
Experience pays. Your luck’s
improving. Is the money there yet?
Line up necessary resources.
Aries (March 21-April 19) —
Today is a 9 — The marketplace
expands. Rejuvenate an old bond
and be more willing to share the
load for the next two days. It’s
wise to follow instructions. The
more you study, the luckier you
get.
Taurus (April 20-May 20) —
Today is an 8 — Work and make
money today and tomorrow. Look
at the data from a new perspective.
Clean up messes. Plan a new
project. Persistence has taught
you where the pitfalls lie.
Gemini (May 21-June 20)
— Today is a 7 — Someone’s
admiring your wisdom. You’re
looking good the next two
days, and it’s getting romantic
(and fun). Handle routines and
responsibilities.
Cancer (June 21-July 22) —
Today is an 8 — Shop carefully,
and spend mindfully. Discover a
new way to earn money working
from home. You’re entering a
practical, domestic phase, and
family takes center stage.
Leo (July 23-Aug. 22) — Today is a
9 — An important factor remains
obscured. You’ve got the talent
today and tomorrow; now do
the homework. Gather financial
documents. All of a sudden,
everything starts making sense.
Virgo (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) — Today
is a 9 — Listen to wise advice.
Today and tomorrow are good for
making money; it’s coming in, but
also going. Profit comes through
sharing your creative ideas.
Brainstorm and invent.
Libra (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) —
Today is a 7 — Fulfill new
responsibilities. You’re stronger,
with heart and mind in sync
today and tomorrow. Put in high
performance work that nobody
will see. Prepare to launch.
Scorpio (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) — Today
is an 8 — The next two days are
good for treasure hunting. Get a
friend on board with the plan. A
meeting could take you very close
to your goal.
Sagittarius (Nov. 22-Dec. 21)
— Today is an 8 — Your work
reflects well on you. Go play and
be free with friends. Keep your
objectives in mind. Team projects
go especially well today and
tomorrow. Get into your social
life, and discover new business
opportunities.
Capricorn (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) —
Today is a 9 — You’re attracting the
attention of an important person.
An adventure calls you out.
Face-to-face conversations lead
to a career and status upgrade.
It’s a good time for professional
meetings and trips.
NEWS TIPS: 621-3193
The Daily Wildcat is always interested in story ideas and
tips from readers. If you see something deserving of
coverage, contact news editor Ethan McSweeney at
news@wildcat.arizona.edu or call 621-3193.
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published Monday through Friday during the fall and
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fast
IN
HISTORY
TODAY FACTS
REBECCA MARIE SASNETTTHE DAILY WILDCAT
TWO BASKETBALL fans hold up a “For Rent” sign during Arizona’s 69-66 loss against ASU at Wells Fargo Arena on Friday.
600 C.E.
>
>
>
>
>
>
Pope Gregory the Great decreed “God bless you”
was the correct response to a sneeze.
1960
Martin Luther King Jr. was arrested in the
Alabama bus boycott.
— POLL —
Do you prefer reading an e-book
or a traditional book?
Answer at dailywildcat.com
and look for the results tomorrow.
James Polk, the 11th U.S. president, was the
first to have his photo taken.
The White House was not always called the
White House. It was given the name by Theodore Roosevelt in 1901.
George Washington was a very successful
liquor distributor.
When John Quincy Adams was president, he
used to skinny dip in the Potomac River.
Woodrow Wilson has his face on the
$100,000 bill.
Herbert Hoover’s son had two pet alligators,
which were sometimes allowed to roam
through the White House.
THE
SPOT:
ON
Pisces (Feb. 19-March 20) —
Today is a 9 — Simplify matters.
Invest in efficiency. Making
your life easier grows you
stronger (and more attractive).
Figure the costs. Wheeling and
dealing may be required. Make
a commitment towards a vision.
Q: How do you like working at the bike
valet?
It’s a great job, it’s easy, I get to sit outside
and study. I’m studying for a test right now!
Q: How are the people you usually deal
with?
Most are great, I’d say only 2 percent give
us trouble.
Q: And how do you handle those 2
percent?
I just help them and be nice. It’s my job.
Q: What’s something crazy you’ve seen
working here?
We always see people get run over, like
once a week — It’s pretty bad. And then, last
week we saw some guy wearing a boot on
his head.
THE DAILY WILDCAT
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News • Monday, February 17, 2014
THE DAILY WILDCAT •3
Learning English tricky for foreign students
BY LAUREN SHORES
Arizona Sonora News Service
There’s no way around it: English is hard to
learn.
It’s really, really tough.
It’s often illogical non-phonetic spelling
patterns, the tendency to use conjunctions
and the fact that words like “hard” and “tough”
can have the same meaning in the above
context, but not in others, make it difficult for
non-native speakers to even understand the
first sentence of this article.
For example, though Gina Martinez is
nearly fluent in English, she does admit that
she struggles a little with the prepositions.
“When people say things like ‘on the bus,’
it’s still confusing to me,” said Martinez, a
psychology student from Bogotá, Colombia.
The UA now has nearly 3,500 international
students enrolled from about 140 countries.
Like American students, degree-seeking
international students are required to take
two 100-level English courses, normally
English 107 and English 108 — the equivalent
of English 101 and 102, but for non-native
speakers. Two-thirds of the international
students admitted in the spring 2014 semester
were eligible to sign up for English 107.
However, the other third placed into English
107A, a class created to help students who
have a shakier grasp on the English language.
This semester is first in two years to have
more than 16 percent of first-semester
international students enroll in 107A. When
so many students need extra assistance to
understand the language used in all of their
university classes, it raises the question: Is the
language barrier too much for these students?
“The language barrier is always a concern,”
said Nick Ferdinand, associate director of the
Center for English as a Second Language.
“However, the number of 107A students
responds to the demand of international
students. Ideally, we want 10 percent of the
student population to be international, and
we’re a little below 10 percent now.”
Despite the roadblocks in learning our bear
of a language, international students continue
to flock to America and UA, and we will
continue to accept them with open arms. As it
turns out, we need them.
“There aren’t as many undergrads from the
United States coming in because the natality
rate has gone down,” Ferdinand said. “The
United States education system has been
expanding for decades, and has reached its
capacity for domestic students. The number
of students at the university will decline if we
don’t recruit internationally.”
It’s a mutually beneficial situation, then,
for the UA and international students.
The university gets higher enrollment and
diversity, and international students get
educated at one of the top 100 universities in
the world.
“U of A is in the 50th of the top 100
universities worldwide,” Ferdinand said.
“Some of these students, especially from
China, save for generations of families just so
one child can go to college.”
REBECCA MARIE SASNETT/THE DAILY WILDCAT
STUDY BUDDY
NUMBER
for really promoting brain health and mental health in general,”
Pessarakli said.
Johansen said that he would like students to take the supplement
daily as a healthier alternative to other substances they might use to
help them study.
“There’s a lot of stuff that’s out there that’s really bad for you.
… Look at diet drinks with things like Splenda, which is a known
carcinogen, which causes cancer,” Johansen said. “We really want to
be an alternative to those options and give a healthy way to improve
memory, concentration and focus.”
The company wants to continue marketing in a grassroots
manner, Pessarakli said, and is planning to partner with sororities
and fraternities to boost advertising for its product.
Greek Life is great for the company’s marketing strategy,
Johansen said, because Greek Life accounts for approximately 10
percent of UA’s population and is an organization that requires
members to maintain a minimum GPA to stay active on campus.
“There’s a lot of stuff that goes on in Greek Life that trickles
throughout the rest of the campus, so even if you’re not affiliated
with Greek Life, you’re still going to know what’s going on,”
Johansen said.
Pessarakli said there are no negative side effects of Study Buddy,
making it a healthy but still effective way to study.
“At the end of the day, it’s all about improving health and wellbeing,” Johansen said.
on. You can’t really have that and
congratulate one and look down on
the other.”
Alexandra Brooks, a mechanical
engineering freshman, said people
should personally know when
they’ve had too many partners
based on whether they start building
a bad reputation because of how
many people they’ve had sex with.
Women seem to be talked about
more and seem to care more about
their reputation, Brooks added.
“A lot of the time, you hear about
a woman being a slut,” Brooks said.
“I occasionally hear a man be called
a man whore. … The couple [of]
guys that I’ve known who’ve been
called that … just treat it kind of like
a trophy.”
This double standard creates
cultural problems that go beyond
how many partners people have had
sex with, said Mari Galup, a Ph.D.
student in gender and women’s
studies who teaches Women and
Western Culture. People often make
assumptions that someone has a lot
of sexual partners because of the
way they dress or how they act, she
added.
These assumptions can also lead
to value judgment or justifications
as to why women are sexually
abused or harassed, Galup said.
FROM PAGE 1
FROM PAGE 1
— Follow Elizabeth Eaton
@Liz_Eaton95
NEWS
Correction
TYLER BAKER/THE DAILY WILDCAT
UA GRADUATES TYLER JOHANSEN and Dr. Mahdi
Pessarakli created the nutritional supplement Study Buddy.
Study Buddy is designed to help students focus and retain
more information when studying.
In the article “UA honors black history“ (Katya Mendoza, Feb. 13)
the statement that the dinner and dialogue series was with the Arizona
Students’ Association was false. The series is with the African American
Students’ Association. The Daily Wildcat regrets the error.
NEW POSITION
FROM PAGE 1
unique experience with the teaching side of
medicine, as well as the practice of medicine.”
Goldschmid’s salary is about $550,000,
most of which is funded by the UA Health
Network. Goldschmid, who is certified in
internal medicine and gastroenterology, has
been working with the UA College of Medicine
— Tucson since 2000, when he was hired to
establish a gastroenterology service/endoscopy
lab. He became chairman of the UA Department
of Medicine in 2006, and in 2008 he took a
position as interim dean at the UA College of
Medicine — Tucson.
The University of Arizona Medical Center
the and UA Health Network are working to
recruit various positions along with a new
dean for the college — including a new chair
for the department of surgery, a chair for the
department of medicine and a director for the
UA Cancer Center. Recruiting surgeons and
physicians to fill these positions takes several
months, according to Katie Riley, director of
media relations and corporate communications
at UAHN and AHSC Office of Public Affairs.
“Experienced surgeons and physicians of the
high caliber we are seeking are uncommon,”
Riley said in an email statement. “UA and
UAHN are absolutely committed to providing
core transplant services. Strengthening these
services in 2014 through strategic recruiting of
experienced physicians and surgeons is a top
priority.”
Garcia said AHSC will have recruited three to
four administrators within the next six months to
fill some of the major positions that are currently
open.
Despite Goldschmid being in the middle
of a pending lawsuit, the new appointment
has nothing to do with the lawsuit against the
College of Medicine — Tucson, according to
Humphrey.
Dr. Rainer Gruessner, former chairman of
the department of surgery, filed a lawsuit in
mid-November after being suspended with pay.
Goldschmid called Gruessner via Skype in July
2013 asking him to step down from his position
as chair of the department of surgery, citing
a “record of poor performance,” according to
court records.
According to court documents, an evaluation
committee within the College of Medicine asked
Gruessner for input on the state of the college
under Goldschmid’s leadership. Gruessner told
the committee in April he was concerned about
the dean’s leadership, and, according to the 191page lawsuit, he believes the dean found out
about what he told the committee.
“Women are seen as losing their
reputation when they sleep with a lot
of people,” Galup said, “and men are
seen as gaining a good reputation.
They get built up by that.”
Ellie Wood, a gender and
women’s studies graduate student
and a teaching assistant for the
course Sex, Health and AIDS, said
how much people actually care
about their reputation depends on
how they were brought up and how
they were educated.
“There are people who, very
much so, were brought up with
open-mindedness, as well as
their education, and realize that
someone’s sexual activity doesn’t
define their morals,” Wood said.
“They’re not going to give you
trouble for having more than one
sexual partner in your life.”
The number of sexual partners
people have shouldn’t matter as
long as people are following and
supporting their personal beliefs,
said Mark Fleckenstein, a systems
engineering sophomore. Being in
love with a sexual partner is also an
important factor, he added.
“I think if you’re genuinely in love,
I think that’s a good enough reason,”
Fleckenstein said. “But I think it’s
different for everyone.”
— Follow Stephanie Casanova
@_scasanova_
The lawsuit claims he was suspended without
cause, and he is not seeking payment but
instead would like to get his job back and restore
his reputation.
Goldschmid declined to comment on the
pending lawsuit and on his new positions.
Garcia also said Goldschmid’s administrative
move is unrelated to the lawsuit, and the new
positions were created to improve the College of
Medicine’s future. Goldschmid was appointed
to the positions because of his understanding of
the college’s clinical mission.
“We’ve been talking about this realignment
in our leadership positions for quite some
time,” Garcia said. “The Gruessner search was
started in December. I think [Goldschmid] also
understands that in his new leadership position,
he’ll be able to influence how the resources
for the College of Medicine get generated and
maybe play a big role in generating additional
resources for us to be able to grow the College
of Medicine. So, I’d say there’s no link to any of
the issues going on with the previous chairman
of surgery.”
COURTESY OF KATIE RILEY
— Follow Stephanie Casanova
@_scasanova_
DR. STEVE GOLDSCHMID, current dean of the College
of Medicine — Tucson, has been appointed to two new
positions within UA health services. Dr. Joe G.N. Garcia
will serve as interim dean of the College of Medicine.
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Monday, February 17, 2014 • Page 4
Opinions
Editor: Katelyn Kennon
letters@wildcat.arizona.edu
(520) 621-3192
twitter.com/dailywildcat
Sex may
sell, but
ability
matters
BY Mackenzie Brown
The Daily Wildcat
W
ith the XXII Olympic Winter
Games in full swing, it’s a
time for excitement and the
hope that people will come together
peacefully and show their passion
for competitive sports. It is a time to
celebrate astounding athletic talent
regardless of race, nationality, religion or
gender.
This year, women’s ski jumping is
included in the games for the first time.
In the past, many sports have been
reserved for men because of ridiculous
worries about the uterus falling out or
being damaged. It seems like we’ve
finally made progress toward gender
equality in sports. Unfortunately, that’s
jumping ahead of where we really are.
Female athletes should not be subject
to societal norms that pressure them
to choose between being feminine
and being athletic, nor should they
be punished if they do or don’t fit
stereotypes.
For female Olympians, their talent
alone is not sufficient for viewers and
sponsors. In order to get endorsements
to continue training, they still need sex
to sell. But what about ability? They’re
some of the greatest athletes of our time,
but not seen as such. Instead, they’re
“sexy and athletic” women who just
happen to have a gold medal or two.
As the world watches competitions
like women’s figure skating, their eyes
will not be on the talent displayed by the
athletes but the amount of sex-appeal
they ooze in skin-tight, hyper-sexualized
uniforms designed to play up all their
best assets. Rather than enjoying the
moment at hand, these women must
worry about not only their appearance,
but also about their performance.
Mikaela Shiffrin, an alpine ski racer,
said in an interview with “The Today
Show” that she spends at least 30
minutes putting on make-up and doing
her hair, because for the few moments
after she takes off her helmet, all cameras
are on her.
Shiffrin’s appearance in those photos
or interviews can mean the difference
between landing a sponsorship deal or
missing it. If she were a man, there would
be no question about sponsorships or
her physical appearance.
Female athletes blur the line between
athleticism and femininity, but their
talents should not be overshadowed by
looks or socially demanded justification
for how women compete or what they
look like doing it. They’re subjected
to the highly dichotomic and sexist
system of being beautiful or “butch,”
with athletic ability coming second. This
limits women to a cycle in which they
fully recognized for their athletic talents.
Lolo Jones, an Olympic hurdler turned
bobsledder, faced a scathing attack from
a New York Times journalist who felt she
gained too much air time for her looks,
rather than her performance.
However, if a woman is not sexual
enough, she’s labeled “butch,” or her
gender is even questioned and tested.
Middle distance runner Caster Semenya’s
gender was publicly scrutinized during
2012 Summer Olympics because of a
gender test she took in 2009 when she did
not fit the “sexy woman athlete” standard.
Rather than a celebration of her massive
victories and multiple new records, old
rumors began circulating again.
The sexism faced by female Olympians
is an unfortunate mark on a competition
that is supposed to celebrate talent
and personal triumph. Such norms
perpetuate femininity as one of the best
qualities a woman can have, and not
being feminine is an obvious deviation
from what society considers normal.
Title IX, passed by Congress in 1972,
finally initiated the slow and painful
change of such binary norms. While
women are now allowed to compete,
they’re still measured against the
achievements of their male counterparts,
and female-dominated sports never
receive the same hype or publicity that
male dominated sports are entitled
to. It’s not that female athletes are not
worthy of the same reverence, our
sexist norms just perpetuate such
discrimination.
The Olympics are supposed to be a
celebration of athletic talent and ability,
not a double-edged sword to hurt,
shame or exploit its female participants.
There needs to be less focus on what
women look like and more on what
they do and who they are: Inspirational
role models and true competitors in the
games.
— Mackenzie Brown is a prephysiology freshman. Follow her
@mac_brown01
Kindling e-book ownership
BY David W. Mariotte
The Daily Wildcat
M
y Flappy Bird high score
is 70. I’ve spent excessive
amounts of time on the
app for a fairly meager payoff, but
hey, at least I didn’t try to spend
excessive amounts of money
for the questionable pleasure of
playing it.
I managed to jump on the birdwagon two days before Flappy Bird
was removed from the App Store
and Google Play. eBay posts tell me
I could make $99,900 for a single
iPhone 5S with Flappy Bird on it —
I just can’t sell one on eBay without
breaking both its and Apple’s terms
of use. So if I want to make bank by
selling devices that haven’t been
reset, I guess I’ll have to sell my
iPad out of my trenchcoat in an
alley somewhere.
Really, I love Flappy Bird too
much to sell it. But for a little
while, I wasn’t sure I’d even have
the option to play it. We were
lucky the game didn’t disappear
completely, even from devices it
was downloaded on, considering
the lack of real ownership for
digital products and the revocable
leases we really obtain.
What’s really being purchased
on the App Store is the right to
use something. These leases are
restricted by the terms of service
most of us agree to without reading.
Basically, the license can be taken
away if the company decides you’ve
misused it. The most obvious
illustration of this concept is, to me,
the difference between a hard copy
of a book and an e-book.
With a hard copy of a book, if I
want, I can take my three copies
and lend one to my friend, donate
one to the library and sell one
to Bookman’s without having to
restore them to factory settings —
though if I was one of those people
who writes in books, I’d do the
courtesy of erasing my marks first.
That’s my decision. I own the
book and as long as I don’t break
the law, mostly copyright law, I can
do pretty much whatever I want
with it.
That isn’t possible with e-books.
Breaking out a Kindle, Nook or
iPad and trying to lend a book to
a friend by letting them borrow
your device or account breaks your
terms of service. The same goes for
trying to resell, donate or leave it to
an heir. Once you break those terms
of service, Amazon or Barnes and
Noble or Apple can come in and
take your license away, making the
book disappear from your device.
That’s not to say that you actually
have to violate the terms of service
to lose your books. On July 17, 2009,
Amazon pulled George Orwell’s
books “1984” and “Animal Farm” off
of Kindle devices, without warning,
because of an issue with the
copyright. After users expressed
surprise, confusion and anger
at losing their books, Amazon
apologized and promised to be
more upfront if it has to remove
books again on such a large scale.
Wired’s “Mr. Know-It-All,”
Brendan I. Koerner, addressed his
frustrations with Amazon’s ability
to revoke the license in one of his
columns.
“If Jeff Bezos [founder and
CEO of Amazon] showed up at
your door and said he wanted to
repossess your books, would you
let him in?” Koerner wrote. “No,
you’d unleash your hounds. And
then hope that one of the dogs got
ahold of his wallet.”
Jokes aside, he has a very
important point. It would be
unreasonable to take away hard
copies like one can take away
e-books. Part of what’s nice about
having a physical book is being
able to do what you want with
it, and the same should apply to
e-books.
Resale is a way to extend a
book’s life after printing stops
and supports the used books
market, generally small business
owners, though also the occasional
company like Bookman’s. Making
resale a violation of terms of
service is an underhanded
shot at market domination and
elimination of a viable, legal, minor
competitor.
It’s great to have my books,
both physical and digital, and my
Flappy Bird. I just wish I actually
owned all of them. A push for true
digital ownership and against
harsh terms of service needs to
happen if we want to keep our
digital possessions as long as we
keep our physical ones. For now
though, if you want to play Flappy
Bird, hit me up. I’ll let you borrow
it — just don’t tell Apple.
— David W. Mariotte is a
journalism sophomore. Follow
him @DW_DavidWallace
Bread and Butter
Opinions columnists get back to basics with Q&A on hot-button issues
Sochi’s opening ceremony: gorgeous or gaudy?
Eric Klump
Shelby Thomas
Mackenzie Brown
A constant flow of bad press
showing piss-colored water,
unfinished rooms and jammed
doors has not made these games
look good. After all that, a big,
shiny ceremony should make
everyone forget these road bumps
… but what the hell happened to
the rings?
I thought the opening
ceremony was really exciting. I
admit, though, that all the talk
about the “Nightmare Bear”
seemed melodramatic until
I watched the highlights and
realized how much the creepy
critter lives up to its nickname …
I feel like I need to go buy a night
light.
For the amount of
homophobia and anti-gay
sentiment in Russia, I’d say its
opening ceremony was pretty
darn flamboyant. It seemed
like a bad LSD trip.
Should “Singles Awareness Day” be a thing?
EK: If Singles Awareness Day becomes a
real holiday, I fully expect it to become just
as commercialized as Valentine’s Day. So
here’s to buying liquor, lotion and Ben and
Jerry’s on clearance at Walgreens in the week
following!
Is it permissible to change the race/gender/
sexuality of a character for film adaptations?
EK: JOUR 439. The lectures taught me a
lot about moving oneself around a situation,
to see it from multiple angles, some of which
made me uncomfortable.
EK: No, not at all. Changing characters can
potentially change the meaning of a piece, unless
of course the only change made is to make the
characters talking animals or robots. You can’t tell
me that “The Lord of the Rings” wouldn’t have
been improved if the hobbits were gerbils, the men
were played by puppies and the orcs were played
by hairless cats.
ST: ENGL 109H. The class itself wasn’t
anything too unique, but my teacher
assigned very demanding and timeconsuming coursework that forced me to
look at art and literature in a way I never had
before. This class whipped me into shape
and made me love and despise writing at the
same time.
ST: If we are being honest, Singles
Awareness Day is already a thing. In fact,
the seven days leading up to Valentine’s Day
should be called “Singles Awareness Week.”
Just look for me and all of the other single
ladies blasting Beyoncé and you will become
very aware.
MB: I took HNRS 208H with Patrick
Baliani, and it may have been the greatest
class of my life. Professor Baliani challenged
me to write and think on a much higher level
than was ever expected of me before, and it
was a challenge I thoroughly enjoyed.
MB: Every day is Singles Awareness Day.
Trust me, if you’re single, you’re totally aware
of it, and when you’re not obsessing about
it privately, you’re rehashing the same old
“why am I single” debate with your best
friend. So no, singles day should absolutely
not be a thing: Unfortunately, it already is.
The Daily Wildcat Editorial Policy
Daily Wildcat staff editorials represent
the official opinion of the Daily Wildcat
staff, which is determined at staff editorial
meetings. Columns, cartoons, online
comments and letters to the editors
represent the opinion of their author and
do not represent the opinion of the Daily
Wildcat.
Which class that you’ve taken at the UA had
the most impact on you?
contact us |
ST: Why not? I think that the more creative film
makers are, the more audiences are challenged
as consumers. I love to see new and fresh takes
on “classic” or “timeless” characters. It keeps the
whole experience fresh and interesting.
MB: I believe that the director should stay true
to the author’s original intent. Changing the race,
gender, or sexuality of a movie character detracts
from the original nature of the plot and can spark
a lot of backlash from hardcore fans. Why mess
around with something that was already good to
begin with?
The Daily Wildcat accepts original, unpublished letters from all of its readers
•
Email letters to: letters@wildcat.arizona.
edu
•
Snail mail to: 615 N. Park Ave., Tucson,
AZ 85719
•
Letters should include name, connection to university (year, major, etc.) and
contact information
•
Letters should be no longer than 350
words and should refrain from personal
attacks
Monday, February 17, 2014
•5
POLICE BEAT
BY MARISSA MEZZATESTA
The Daily Wildcat
Two IDs
A UA student was cited for underage drinking in
Coronado Residence Hall on Feb. 7 at 1:07 a.m.
A University of Arizona Police Department officer
responded to a call reporting an intoxicated man trying
to gain access to rooms in Coronado. The student was
standing at the front desk, and the officers saw that he had
red, watery eyes.
The student was looking for his ID but could not find it.
The resident assistant handed the student’s wallet to the
officer, who found two IDs inside — one from New York and
one from California.
The ID from New York was a fake and the one from
California was the student’s actual ID. When asked, the
student said that he had paid $150 for the fake ID but did not
say where he purchased it.
The student also said he had been drinking at an off
campus house party.
The student was then cited by the officer.
GRILLED
CHICKEN CHIPOTLE
date me
THE
CHOICE
IS
YOURS
One way to get a ride home
A UA student was diverted for underage drinking on Feb.
7 at 2:41 a.m.
A UAPD officer was driving down Sixth Street, approaching
Park Avenue, when he noticed a woman standing in the street
leaning against a construction fence. The officer stopped and
turned on his rear lights to alert her that he was approaching.
As the officer approached the woman, he saw her step away
from the fence and almost stumble into the construction area.
The officer noticed her swaying and a strong smell of alcohol.
The woman identified herself and said she was a student.
When asked if she had been drinking, she told the officer
no. When asked a second time, she admitted to drinking a
“small” amount of vodka at an on campus party.
The woman consented to a breath test and the officer
confirmed that she had alcohol in her system.
After the officer verified that she did not have any
weapons, he drove her to her home.
The student was then diverted to the Dean of Students
Office.
union.arizona.edu/pangea | union.arizona.edu/coreplus
Hall call
A UA student was taken to the University Arizona
Medical Center and cited for underage drinking Saturday.
At 3:01 a.m. a UAPD officer responded to a call from
Arizona-Sonora Residence Hall about an extremely
intoxicated man. Upon arrival the officer found the student
was sitting on his floor, with watery, glassy eyes and wet
pants.
When asked if he had consumed too much alcohol the
student replied that he had. The resident assistant said
he had called for a medical evaluation after finding the
student stumbling in the hallway.
The student was transported to UAMC and cited for
minor in bodily possession of alcohol later that day.
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EVENTS
ArizonA Daily
Wildcat
EVENT CALENDAR
MON.
17
FEB 2014
all over! ENJOY EVERY DAY
CAMPUS EVENTS
CAMPUS EVENTS
TUCSON EVENTS
UMC Blood Drive. UA Medical Center,
Cafeteria. 1501 N. Campbell Ave. 12:30pm7pm. All blood donors will receive a free shirt,
while supplies last.
Exhibit-‘Curtis Reframed: The Arizona
Volume.’ Arizona State Museum, 1013
E. University Blvd. Open 10am to 5pm.
This exhibit runs through July 1, 2015 and
features photographs of Native peoples
at the start of the 20th century by Edward
S. Curtis. $5 for adults, free to students.
Road. Explore the Universe like never-before
with the largest dedicated public viewing
telescope in the southwest. 520-626-8122
to register.
Surgical Weight-Loss Seminar. UA Cancer
Center, Kiewit Auditorium. 1501 N. Campbell
Ave. 5pm-6pm. This seminar is led by Dr.
Carlos Galvani and will discuss the latest
medical advancements in surgical weight loss.
‘Mindfulness and Meditation’ Training.
1:30 pm- 2:30 pm at The University of Arizona
Medical Center - 1501 N. Campbell Ave.
Kiewit Auditorium. Free stress-relieving
meditation training. Regular meditation has
many preventative benefits and helps to
cultivate a peaceful mind. If you arrive after
1:30 p.m., please enter the room quietly and
turn off cell phones and electronic devices.
‘Mars Madness’ Special Collections Exhibit.
Special Collections, 1510 E. University Blvd.
This exhibit features a variety of material
associated with Ray Bradbury, the famous
science fiction author of ‘Fahrenheit 451’
as well as photos of Mars. This exhibit is
open 9am-6pm and runs until August 1st.
TUCSON EVENTS
Geronimo Exhibit. 949 E. 2nd Street. Open
Mon– Sat from 11 am– 4pm. Discover
the man behind the legend in this visual
biography of the mythic Apache warrior,
featuring the rifle Geronimo surrendered
to Indian Agent John Clum, and more
at Arizona Historical Society’s Arizona
History Museum.
Traffic Light series by Susan Rider.
TIA Main Gallery, 7250 S. Tucson Blvd.
This series of paintings by Susan Rider
will be shown at the Tucson International
Airport Main Gallery through April 30th.
Cost: Free.
SkyNights StarGazing Program. Mount
Lemmon SkyCenter. 9800 E. Ski Run
Tucson Rodeo Parade Museum Tours
Jan. 02 – Mar. 29, 9:30 AM to 3:30 PM 4823
S 6th Ave. Adults: $10 Tour Tucson Rodeo
Parade Museum holds 150 buggies and
wagons, Old West artifacts, and a typical
Old West streetscape, historical Tucson
memorabilia, and more.
World Golf Championships-Accenture
Match Play Championship Feb. 17- 23. Gate:
7:30am - 6:00pm 14388 N. Dove Mountain
Blvd. One of the biggest draws on the PGA
TOUR circuit, this single-elimination matchplay golf tournament features the Official
World Golf Rankings’ top 64 professional
golfers in a contest for a $1.4 million grand
prize at the Golf Club at Dove Mountain.
Compiled by Katherine Fournier
To sponsor this calendar, or list an event, email calendar@dailywildcat.com or call 621.3425 Deadline 3pm 2 business days prior to publication.
Monday, February 17, 2014 • Page 6
SPORTS
Editor: James Kelley
sports@wildcat.arizona.edu
(520) 621-2956
twitter.com/wildcatsports
SOFTBALL
dailywildcat.com/sports
UA dominates tourney
GYMCATS FINISH
THIRD AT FORT
WORTH MEET
dailywildcat.com/sports
TRACK AND
FIELD BREAKS
MORE RECORDS
CARLOS HERRERA/THE DAILY WILDCAT
JUNIOR KELLIE FOX crosses home after a two-run home run against Tennessee State during the 17th annual Hillenbrand Invitational at Hillenbrand Memorial Stadium on Saturday.
Arizona beat the Tigers 10-1 in five innings in front of 2,471 fans. Fox leads the Wildcats with 18 RBIs and five home runs.
BY LUKE DELLA
The Daily Wildcat
NUMBER OF THE DAY
16
ASU’s 69-66 upset of
No. 2 Arizona men’s
basketball was the Sun
Devils’ first win over a top-five
team in 16 years. ASU beat
No. 4 Stanford 90-87 in 1998.
The Sun Devils’ last win over
a top-five UA squad was in
1992.
SCORE CENTER
BADGERS TAME
WOLVERINES
No. 21 Wisconsin 75
No. 15 Michigan 62
For Arizona softball head coach
Mike Candrea every weekend is a test.
After six games this weekend at the
17th annual Hillenbrand Invitational,
Candrea said Arizona passed with
flying colors.
The No. 24 Wildcats (9-0) won all six
games and beat their four opponents
by a combined score of 39-1.
“We need to keep embracing
the process,” Candrea said. “One
weekend doesn’t make a season.”
While a weekend may not make
a season, it could be a launch pad.
During the Hillenbrand Invitational,
the Wildcats earned two victories over
No. 4 Alabama (8-2). Arizona defeated
the Crimson Tide 3-0 on Saturday
night and 8-0 on Sunday.
“We’re not backing down,”
shortstop Kellie Fox said about the
team’s two wins over Alabama. “We
know we’re a great team, and now we
have something to prove it and build
off it.”
In Saturday’s victory Arizona
received a 5.0 inning, three-hit and
nine strikeout performance in the
circle from senior Estela Piñon, a step back after a loss — or in the
despite it being the Wildcats’ lowest- Wildcats’ case, a win.
“Any time you can beat a quality
scoring game so far this season.
“She set the tone for the next team there’s a carryover, but my
day and fired us up and did a really biggest concern would be how would
amazing job,” said senior pitcher we perform on [Sunday],” Candrea
said. “[Sunday] was the statement. We
Shelby Babcock.
Babcock (2-0) started the second got where we needed to again. We’re
game against Alabama, matching her the aggressors, we’re the ones taking
classmate by going 5.0 innings and care of business.”
Fox said she was stunned with joy
allowing no runs on only two hits.
“Babs gave us a senior performance when she learned that her team had
won six games
that I hadn’t
by such a large
seen in a while,”
margin.
Candrea said.
EXTRA BASE HITS
S
h
e
With
some
Arizona now owns a 90-3
attributed
an
help from a firstrecord at the Hillenbrand
all-around good
inning grand slam
Invitational
performance by
by freshman Mo
the Wildcats for
Mercado, Babcock
the success, but
was able to cruise
to the five inning run ruling of the made sure to credit the defense.
“We had great defense this
Crimson Tide.
“We have five pitchers who can all weekend and fed off that,” Fox said.
go out there and perform,” Babcock “The good defense helped out the
said, “and we can all do it in different pitching, which carried into the
dugout and helped give us success at
roles and situations.”
For Candrea, part of embracing the the plate.”
Babcock echoed those statements.
process means taking what the team
Following Arizona’s 5-0 victory over
learned from the previous game and
improving on it to the next, not taking Grand Canyon University in its sixth
NBA East All-Stars 163
NBA West All-Stars 155
MEDAL COUNT
NED
5
5
7
17
RUS
4
7
5
16
USA
4
4
8
16
NOR
5
3
6
14
“
TWEET TO NOTE
Throwing stuff isn’t safe,
safety school #AZvsASU
—@GottliebShow, Doug Gottlieb,
CBS Sports analyst
During the second half of
the Sun Devil’s upset of Arizona men’s basketball, an ASU
fan threw a large object at the
Wildcats.
Follow us on Twitter
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Follow us on Twitter
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DAILYWILDCAT.COM
— Follow Luke Della
@LukeDella
BASEBALL
HOCKEY
BY ROSE ALY VALENZUELA
return to
big dance
Arizona slows down Golden Wildcats
Flashes, wins rubber match hope for
The Daily Wildcat
EAST BESTS
WEST
and final game of the invitational, Fox
now leads the team with 18 RBIs and
five home runs. She is also is hitting an
even .500 on the season.
As the best run producer for the
Wildcats so far, Fox looks set as the
number-three hitter in Arizona’s
lineup. Other roles are still being
defined, but Candrea said he likes
where this team is headed.
Candrea said he tells every one
on the team that no matter their
spot in the lineup or on the bench,
there still is a role and job for them.
He was pleased with how even the
non-starters came in and performed,
but also kept the energy alive in the
dugout.
As for the pitchers, Arizona has
five on roster who Candrea is getting
more comfortable with throwing in
different situations.
“We have five kids we can use at
any time,” Candrea said. “That’s very
valuable to us because we can mix
and match and it’s never been that we
had five pitchers of that quality, so it’s
a good problem to have.”
Sunday afternoon was pleasant
for Arizona baseball as it won the
first series of the season for the
20th consecutive time.
Arizona (2-1) was able to
bounce back from a loss on
Saturday to defeat Kent State 7-1
on Sunday.
Sophomore Cody Hamlin (1-0)
made his Wildcat debut and went
seven innings, allowing one run
on four hits with three strikeouts
on a total of 74 pitches. He
transferred from Western Nevada
College.
“He’s new to the program,
and he’s obviously made a very
strong impression,” head coach
Andy Lopez said. “We probably
were a little too quick in terms of
getting him out [before the eighth
inning].”
Hamlin’s first two strikeouts of
the season came during the first
inning.
“I felt that my first start went
well,” Hamlin said. “I pounded the
zone and got a lot of strikes, and I
let the defense do their work and
just went from there. I need to
keep doing what I did today and
hopefully keep starting.”
Hamlin’s only issue was getting
ahead of hitters, but he held the
Golden Flashes well enough to
win the game.
Arizona looked completely
different on defense on Sunday
after losing 14-5 on Saturday, but
it didn’t make a lot of changes.
The field starters did not
change, except for the catcher.
Instead of junior Riley Moore, who
caught on Friday and Saturday,
junior Jordan Berger was the
backstop.
“[Riley] is not doing a very good
job defensively,” Lopez said. “The
shortstop position, the centerfield
position and the catching position
are positions where we really need
a solid defensive performance.”
Lopez said he was satisfied
with Berger’s defensive work, and
offensively, Berger recorded a hit
and had two runs batted in.
Lopez said that Berger will stay
BY JOEY PUTRELO
The Daily Wildcat
CARLOS HERRERA/THE DAILY WILDCAT
SOPHOMORE PITCHER Cody Hamlin allowed one run on four hits in his Arizona debut
on Sunday. The Wildcats beat Kent State 7-1 to win the series.
in the starting catching position
for the upcoming game on
Tuesday.
Offensively,
Arizona
was
looking aggressive with its baserunning and finished with a total
of 13 hits for the game.
Concluding his first three-game
college series, freshman Bobby
Dalbec led Arizona with three hits
on Sunday.
Dalbec didn’t record hits on
Friday and Saturday, but he said
he remained patient and kept
doing what he said he thought he
needed to do.
“I was hitting the ball hard
on Friday and Saturday, but I
was hitting it right at people,”
Dalbec said. “I didn’t really want
to change my approach. I just
wanted to stick with it.”
Dalbec played shortstop before
starting his college career and was
on the starting lineup as the first
baseman during this weekend’s
series.
“It’s a lot harder than everyone
thinks,” Dalbec said. “It’s a lot of
footwork stuff that I have to get
used to, so I’m still getting used
to it but I’ll be good with the next
couple days.”
The Wildcats opened the season
with a 13-1 victory over Kent State.
Arizona will practice today and
host Utah Valley on Tuesday and
Wednesday.
— Follow Rose Aly Valenzuela
@RoseAlyVal
In the final weekend Arizona
hockey had to show why it
should be selected for the 2014
ACHA Men’s Division 1 National
Championships, it was swept and
outscored 11-1 at Minot State.
Regardless, UA head coach Sean
Hogan said he believes the Wildcats
will get their first invitation to the
tournament since the 2005-06
season.
“We’ll slip one or two spots,”
Hogan said, “but we still fully expect
to be in the National Tournament
and [are] starting to prepare for
that.”
The 20-team bracket for the
tournament will be unveiled
tonight at 6 p.m. The selection
show will be streamed live via www.
liberty.edu/cslive.
The No. 14 Wildcats (17-19-0, 8-80 WCHL) lost 3-0 to the defending
ACHA Division I champion, No. 10
Beavers (21-6-4) on Friday.
Arizona’s offense came up empty
on four power play opportunities
while Steven Sisler kept his team in
the game, saving 42 of 45 shots.
The following night, a grease fire
erupted in the Wildcats’ net as the
Beavers won 8-1.
“Honestly, it’s a culmination of
the same problem we’ve had every
year with our schedule,” Hogan
said. “This week we only had one
practice. It showed.”
Garrett Patrick got the nod in net
Saturday, but was pulled in the first
period for Sisler after letting Minot
get a 3-1 lead. The move backfired
as Sisler immediately allowed two
“
We still fully
expect to be in
the national
tournament.
“
— Sean Hogan,
head coach
HOCKEY, 7
Sports• Monday, February 17, 2014
The Daily Wildcat • 7
women’s basketball
Depleted Wildcats
swept in Bay Area
jumper with 14:54 remaining in the
half.
“We were actually playing a little
Arizona women’s basketball could too fast early,” Butts said. “We actually
not keep up the momentum after didn’t want to play that fast. We really
upsetting ASU last week and suffered don’t have enough bodies to hold up
two losses in the Bay Area.
and run that high-pace offense.”
On Sunday, the Wildcats (5-20,
The defense broke down for the
1-13, Pac-12 Conference) lost to No. 6 last 12 minutes of the half and allowed
Stanford (24-2, 13-1, Pac-12) 74-48.
Stanford to get comfortable from
Arizona was short-handed from the beyond the arc.
start, as the squad was without senior
Chiney
Ogwumike
finished
starting guard Carissa Crutchfield, the game with 15 points and nine
who went down with an ankle injury rebounds, and led Stanford, which put
in the closing seconds of the 65-49 loss the game away early by going on a 40–8
to No. 22 Cal (17-7, 9-4, Pac–12) on run to finish the half.
Friday. That left the UA with only six
Butts said Arizona let the Cardinal
players.
take too many jump
“Stanford
had
shots.
We really don’t
a good game plan
“As great as
have enough
by knocking down
[Stanford’s shooters
shots and taking
are], I do not think
bodies to hold
care of business
they are good
up and run
with a home win,”
shooting off the
that highArizona head coach
dribble,” Butts said.
paced offense.
Niya Butts said of the
Stanford made
— Niya Butts,
Cardinal, who shot
51.4 percent of
head coach
48.3 percent for the
its field goals,
game.
including
10-17
Despite the depleted roster, Arizona from 3-point land in the first half.
held Stanford’s shooters in check and
Arizona only shot 25 percent and
took an 11-8 lead after senior guard made no 3-pointers.
Kama Griffitts, who finished with eight
The game was well out of reach in
points and four rebounds and hit a the second half as Stanford put in all its
BY Tyler Keckeisen
The Daily Wildcat
“
“
basketball
from page 1
because it couldn’t score enough and is a
much different team since it beat 91-68 ASU
last month.
Arizona is 2-2 since sophomore Brandon
Ashley suffered a season-ending injury at
California.
ASU fans chanted “Brandon Ashley,”
surely to taunt Arizona, but they had a
point. The Wildcats are not the same
without Ashley.
His stats, 11.5 points per game and
5.8 rebounds a game, weren’t overly
spectacular, but the UA lost one of its
greatest strengths. With Ashley in the
frontcourt and sophomore center Kaleb
Tarczewski, the Wildcats could switch from
a big team to a small one on the fly.
Without Ashley, Arizona is struggling to
find itself.
Does it want to go big with another
forward like junior forward Matt Korcheck
taking Ashley’s minutes, or small with
freshman guard Elliott Pitts playing in his
stead?
Or neither?
Even with its highly touted recruiting
classes each year, the bench scored no
points at ASU. The Wildcats are not filling
the void.
hockey
from page 6
goals on three shots faced.
Hogan then sent Sisler to the bench and
put Patrick back in the net. The freshman
ended up surrendering another trio of
goals to the Beavers.
Freshman forward Alex O’Dea was the
lone Wildcat to score all weekend.
carlos herrera/The Daily Wildcat
Senior guard Carissa Crutchfield suffered an ankle injury in Arizona’s 65-49 loss at California. The Wildcats had to make do with only six
players at Stanford and lost 74-48. Crutchfield is fourth on the team in scoring with 7.9 points per game.
reserves in.
Freshman forward LaBrittney Jones
and junior guard Candice Warthen
had 11 and nine points for Arizona,
respectively.
Bonnie Samuelson finished with 17
points for Stanford.
In the game at Cal on Friday night,
the Golden Bears and the Wildcats
went on 7-0 and 10-0 runs to start the
game.
But after the score was tied at 10 with
13:28 remaining the first half, Brittany
Boyd and Reshanda Gray took over for
Cal. The two finished with seven and
16 points for the game, respectively.
The duo would combine to score 17
In Ashley’s absence, the offense has
struggled mightily. Arizona’s first true
pass-first point guard in years, junior T.J.
McConnell, is shooting way more than he
did when they were winning 20-something
games in a row. As a result, the UA’s halfcourt offense has suffered.
Against Cal, Oregon, Oregon State and
ASU, the Wildcats shot 32.3, 40, 50 and 35.9
percent, respectively.
Arizona’s other starter at guard, junior
Nick Johnson, has also struggled in the
post-Ashley era. Johnson has shot 1-for-14,
5-for-16, 4-for-10 and 5-for-20 from the field
in the last four games.
The once-mighty Wildcats now go
minutes without scoring field goals. The
Wildcats can probably limp through the
rest of Pac-12 season, but not being able to
score will become a huge problem in about
a month.
Arizona lost on the road, barely,
to a couple average teams that are so
unaccustomed to success, their fans don’t
know when to rush the court.
However, probably by its second game
of the NCAA tournament (assuming the
Wildcats can hold onto a No. 1 or No. 2
seed), the UA will face a team that can
exploit its offensive offense.
— Follow James Kelley
@jameskelley520
Arizona will close out the regular season
this weekend against No. 1 ASU.
“We’re finally back home this week; we
don’t get on the ice until Wednesday but
at least we’ll be at home,” Hogan said. “We
just have to find a way to battle through that
adversity.”
— Follow Joey Putrelo
@JoeyPutrelo
points in the half to help lead the Bears
to a 29-14 run and a 39-24 halftime
lead.
The Bears ran a 2-2-1 full court zone
defense, which led to nine first-half
turnovers for Arizona. Cal would score
12 points off of Arizona turnovers.
Cal opened up the second half with
a 15-8 run and took a 54-32 lead with
14:41 remaining.
Seconds later, Boyd went out with
an ankle injury, and four minutes after
that, Gray got into foul trouble and left
the game.
Arizona could not take advantage of
the two losses, however.
Freshman
forward
Breanna
Workman,
sophomore
guard
Keyahndra Cannon and senior
forward Erica Barnes each chipped
in 10 points for Arizona. Barnes had a
career high with four blocks as well.
The Wildcats will host Utah Friday
night.
“We just got to keep working hard
and go back to the drawing board,”
Butts said, “as we got an opportunity
at home.”
— Follow Tyler Keckeisen
@tyler_keckeisen
tennis
Women’s tennis loses
its first match of ’14
Grgan 1-6, 7-6, 6-3. Freshman
Lauren Marker, sophomore
Shayne Austin and junior
Arizona women’s tennis Lauren Oldham all defeated
suffered its first loss on the their opponents in straight sets.
season on Friday at No. 19
“This was a very challenging
Texas Tech.
match, and I was pleased to see
Junior Lacey Smyth had the us turn things our way,” Maes
only win for the Wildcats on the said. “It was tough beginning
day, defeating No. 115 Kenna to end — very good day for the
Kilgo 6-3, 6-3 as Arizona lost ’Cats.”
6-1.
Me a n w h i l e,
“This
was
the men’s team
not a great
defeated Idaho
Matt Dunn
day for our
7-0 on Saturday.
Year
girls,”
head
“I think we
sophomore got off to a slow
coach
Vicky
Maes said in a
Position start in doubles
press release.
and
singles,
—
“We
didn’t
but everybody
compete the
pulled through,”
Major
way we had to,
business senior Kieran
to beat a team
Thompson said.
like Tech. I felt
In
doubles
2014 stats
going in that
play,
senior
Doubles record: 7-1
we matched
Mario Urquidi
Singles record: 2-0
up well, but we
and sophomore
didn’t get off to
Matt
Dunn
a good start.”
defeated
Odon
Barta
The
Wildcats
bounced and Artemiy Nikitin 6-2.
back after the loss by beating Sophomore Naoki Takeda and
Georgia State 5-2. After losing freshman Will Kneale defeated
all three doubles matches, Cesar Torres and Andrew
Arizona earned the victory in Zedde 6-1, earning the doubles
the singles matches. Senior point for the Wildcats.
Kim Stubbe lost her first set,
In singles play, senior
but came back to defeat Masa Fredrik Ask quickly defeated
BY Matt Wall
The Daily Wildcat
Peak Performer
Odon Barta 6-2, 6-2. Takeda
defeated Artemiy Nikitin 6-2,
6-4. Thompson overpowered
Jose Bendeck 6-5 (9-7), 6-4
to secure the victory for the
Wildcats.
“That got close quick,” head
coach Tad Berkowitz said. “I
thought Idaho did a nice job.
We showed good toughness
[Saturday].”
Against Nevada, Arizona had
a much more difficult time,
losing 5-2.
In doubles matches, Ask and
Thompson defeated Quentin
Mege and Moez Echargui 6-1.
However, Victor Ouvrard and
Robert Allan defeated Urquidi
and Dunn 6-2. Andrew Poustie
and Fernando Sunago defeated
Takeda and Kneale 6-2.
“You have to give credit to
Nevada,” Berkowitz said. “We
came out strong after losing
the doubles point to win the
five first sets, but there was
a
15-minute
momentum
change that turned the tables.
Our guys competed hard and
fought hard. Nevada just got us
[Sunday].”
— Follow Matt Wall
@mwall20
UA Science Spring 2014 Lecture Series
Tonight, February 17 at 7pm
at UA Centennial Hall
The
Evolving
Brain
The Literate Brain
Pélagie M. Beeson, PhD
Unlike speaking,
written language
and literacy requires
explicit and prolonged
instruction. How is
this accomplished?
By studying disorders following
brain damage in previously literate
adults, and by using brain imaging
techniques to examine neural activity
in healthy individuals engaged in
reading and spelling, a new
understanding of the human brain
is being revealed.
cos.arizona.edu/brain
Thanks to our underwriters
this event is
Free!
Arizona Daily Star
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Daily Wildcat,
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News • Monday, February 17, 2014
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UMC. 3 carports, fireplace, gas,
bbq, Air‑conditioning,
D/W and
laundry. Only $2,000/mo, available
Aug. 1st. 1418 E. Adams (520)240‑
2615.
StUdio And one bedrooms as
low as $550*! Urban highrise apart‑
ments downtown! Call 520‑777‑
5771 or visit www.herbertliving.‑
com for more info.
!!! FAmily oWned & oPer‑
Ated. Studio 1, 2, 3, 4 & 5 BD
houses & apartments. 4blks north
of UofA. $400 to $2,400. Some
with utilities paid. Available now
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trolled.
299‑5020,
624‑3080.
<www.uofahousing.com>
!!!! 6BloCkS From UA. Avail‑
able August 1. Remodeled 3BD/
2BA, 1800sqft, hardwood floors,
W/D,
large
fenced
yard.
$1450/mo. 751‑4363 or 409‑3010.
!!!! AVAilABle noW‑ 2Bed‑
room, 1Bath from $830/month.
Unique, secluded, super conve‑
nient, peaceful central location.
Only 3 minutes (1 Mile) east of UA
Medical Center.
Washer/dryer,
carport, fenced back yard. Call
520‑747‑9331 to check them
out.
http://www.universityrental‑
info.com/uofaproperties‑pima.php
!!!! StyliSh hoUSeS reSerV‑
ing NOW FOR SUMMER/FALL
2014. Studios, 1,2,5 & 6 Bed‑
rooms. $425 to $3650 depending
on Plan & location. http://www.Uni‑
versityRentalinfo.com
Wash‑
er/Dryer, A/C, Alarm. Call 520‑
747‑9331 to see one today!
Publisher’s Notice: All real estate advertised herein is subject to the Federal
Fair Housing Act, which makes it illegal to advertise any preference, limitation
or discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex, handicap, familial status
or national origin, or intention to make any such preferences, limitations or
discrimination. We will not knowingly accept any advertising for real estate which is in violation of the law. All persons are hereby informed that all dwellings advertised are available
on an equal opportunity basis.
!!!!! 4Br/4.5BA +3 car garage.
Only a few left at The Village from
only $1495 per month. 5‑7 Blocks
NW UA HUGE luxury Homes.
Large master suites with walk‑in
closets +balconies +10ft ceilings
up and down +DW, W&D, Pantry,
TEP Electric Discount, Monitored
Security System. Pool privileges.
884‑1505
www.MyUofARental.‑
com *SPECIAL is for immediate
rental through July 2014 only
!!!!! 6Bdrm 6BAth home.
$1895/ month. Just a few blocks
from campus. 3 car GARAGE,
walk‑in closets, all granite coun‑
ters, large outside balconies off
bedrooms, very large master
suites, high ceilings. TEP Electric
Discount. Monitored security sys‑
tem.
884‑1505
www.MyUo‑
fARental.com *Special is for imme‑
diate rental through July 2014 only.
!!!!! A Very special true luxury
homes. Leasing for May/August
2014. 1,2,3,4 bedroom homes.
www.collegediggz.com
520.333.4125 or
info@collegediggz.com
!!!!! reSerVe noW For SUm‑
mer/FAll 2014. FANTASTIC
NEW houses 5BEDROOM, 2Bath
$2400/mo Convenient to campus ‑
A/C, alarm, washer/ dryer, pri‑
vate backyard, plus more. Web‑
site: http://www.universityrentalinfo.‑
com/water‑floorplans.php Pets wel‑
come. No security deposit (o.a.c.)
Call 520‑747‑9331 to see one to‑
day.
!!!!! tired oF seeing your friends
having all the fun with their private
pools and luxurious homes within
walking distance to campus? Then
lease one of these amazing
homes before they are all gone!
View properties at www.Presti‑
giousUofArentals.com AND then
call 520.331.8050 (owner/agent)
to tour and lease one of these lux‑
ury homes for August 2014!
!!!!!!
WWW.myUoFArentAl.
com Reserve now for August
2014‑ 2,3,&4 Bedroom homes.
Close to campus. (520)884‑1505
!!!!!!!!AWeSome
5Bedroom
2nd Street houses next to the
3rd Street Bike Route. Just
$2450/month
($490/bedroom).
Taking applications for Summer/‑
Fall 2014. Washer/dryer, alarm
system, ceiling fans, A/C, private
fenced backyard. CALL 520‑747‑
9331 to see one today. http://www.‑
universityrentalinfo.com/uofa‑prop‑
erties‑2nd‑st.php
!!!look!!! AAA**9** Bedroom,
5Bath, 2Story house located on
Adams!! It doesn’t get any better
than this!! 2Kitchen, 2Living areas,
LOTS of storage, closet space,
large bedrooms, private parking.
2Sets full size W/D, Air condition‑
ing. Call now before it’s gone!
520‑398‑5738
!!!lUxUry 3 And 4 Bedroom
Homes available August 2014.
Cash special $500. Contact 520‑
954‑7686 or
www.uofarental‑
homes.com.
4Bedroom 2Bath @lester and
Warren. 1647 e. lester. WWW.‑
UoFAAreArentAlhomeS.‑
Com. Walk to UmC.Carpeted
bedrooms. tiled kitchen, din‑
ing room, living room, and
bathrooms.
dishwasher/
Fridge/ Stove/ Washer/ dryer.
Walled back yard. Front porch.
Sun deck. Fireplace in large liv‑
ing room great for entertain‑
ing. Ceiling fans. Air Condi‑
tioned. lots of parking. great
Service. $2100/ month ($525
per bedroom) 520.404.8954.
4Bedroom 2Bath For A great
Price. 1100 e. Water St. tiled
living
room/entertainment
room, dining room, kitchen,
and bathrooms. Carpeted bed‑
rooms.
Fridge/Stove/dish‑
washer. Washer/dryer. Front
porch. Sun deck. living room
with fireplace great for enter‑
taining. Ceiling fans. Air Condi‑
tioned. lots of off street park‑
ing. By Cattran stop. Bike to
class.
WWW.Uo‑
FAAreArentAlhomeS.Com.
$1700/ month ($425 per bed‑
room) 520‑404‑8954.
Bike to CAmPUS IN FY14! 1,2
& 3bdm Townhomes & Condos!
A/C, Gar, FREE WIFI & all appl.
www.caliberco.com 520‑790‑0776
Download KAMP’s newest
cutting edge, space age
Android app TODAY!
It slices, it dices, it plays the radio!
KAMP.Arizona.edu/Android-App
hAVe A lArge GROUP???
FRAT OR SORORITY?? We cur‑
rently have a VERY LARGE
HOME with 7++ bedrooms avail‑
able for August 2014!! Just blocks
from Campus on Adams, near the
Streetcar too!! Call now to sched‑
ule a viewing. 520‑398‑5738
PreleASing 1Bdrm hoUSe
a/c, tile throughout, fenced yard,
pets ok $400 ALSO PRELEASING
SAM HUGES 1Bdrm House $650
REDI 520‑623‑5710
www.azredirentals.com
PreleASing 2Bdrm 1mile
from campus House wood floors,
bonus room, fenced yard $795
ALSO GREAT LOCATION! 2Bdrm
2ba House a/c, carport, fenced
yard, w/d hkup, tile floors, pets ok
$825 REDI 520‑623‑5710
www.azredirentals.com
PreleASing WAlk to CAM‑
PUS 4Bdrm 2Ba House a/c, wash‑
er/dryer, fenced yard $1600
ALSO
PRELEASING
4Bdrm
2Bath House a/c, washer/dryer,
Pool, Alarm, washer/dryer $2400
REDI 520‑623‑5710
www.azredirentals.com
PreleASing WAlk to UofA
3Bdrm House a/c, wood floors, car‑
port, walled yard $895 ALSO
2Blocks from UofA 3Bdrm 2Ba
Completely Remodeled, fenced
yard, pets ok, a/c $1195 REDI 520‑
623‑5710 www.azredirentals.com
SPACioUS 5Bedroom 3BAth,
2Story homes avail. For August
2014. Short distance to hop on the
Cat Tran! Prices starting at $400
per person. W/D, Ice cold A/C,
Call NOW to view any of these
homes. 520‑245‑5604
StyliSh 4Bedroom homeS
available for August 2014, starting
at $400 per person! Be right by the
New streetcar, or on the Cat Tran.
Please call 520‑398‑5738 for more
information
UAoFFCAmPUS.Com ‑ 3 & 4
bedroom houses, 2014 school
year.
Walk/bike to campus.
Newer, high quality, AC, wash‑
er/dryer, granite, stainless steel.
WAlk
to
CAmPUS,
Sam
Hughes‑ 2, 3, 4, 5BD. Newer
homes! Within 1mi to UofA, A/C,
garages and all appl included.
www.caliberco.com 520‑790‑0776
WAlk to UoFA + UmC!!
2Bd/1BA + BonUS room
hoUSe At linden/WArren
$950/ month. CAll SierrA
At (520)270‑4437
UoFA StUdent Seeking room‑
mate. Lrg 3Bd/2Ba Townhouse.
Utilities shared & internet paid.
W/D, minutes from UofA. Pool &
parking included. $360/mo. Text/
call 520‑269‑8157.
luxury Student living! Safe!
Fully Furnished! level Apart‑
ment building. master bed‑
room with private bath. 42”
t.V., bed, desk, couch, wash‑
er/dryer,
stainless
steel
kitchen and balcony. rooftop
pool, WiFi, computer room,
parking garage and 24hour se‑
curity. nothing to worry about
at $945/ month. Please contact
kelly at coxghee@yahoo.com
for further details.
desper‑
ate!!! if rented will include a
$100.00 Chipotle and Visa gift‑
card.
ArizonA elite CleAnerS‑
house cleaning & landscaping ser‑
vices. Free Estimates. We are li‑
censed, bonded and insured. Call
520‑207‑9699
www.ArizonaEliteCleaners.com
BAllet/modern
droP‑in
dance classes for non‑dance ma‑
jors at professional southside stu‑
dio. Call for schedule and costs
520‑298‑7738
BrAnd neW 60S with flip‑flop
hubs and all aluminum compo‑
nents $225. 26‑inch men and wom‑
en’s beach cruisers $170. 619‑990‑
7218
Comics • Monday, February 17, 2014
The Daily Wildcat • 9
BEAR DOWN TIMES
Casa España / Casa Royale Apartments
1725 North Park Avenue| (520) 622-8503
www.casaespanaapts.com
Prices starting from as low as $299! 3 and 4 bedrooms available
*Restrictions apply, prices, specials, lease terms subject to change at any time
Brewster Rockit: Space Guy!
doyouwant...
answers to your ques�ons about sex and rela�onships
UA is ranked #3 in the latest Trojan Sexual Health
Report Card for Sexual Health Resources.
Q
Is it o.k. to skip the last week of pills in
a birth control pill pack?
A. Yes. Only the first 21 days of pills in a pack
work to prevent pregnancy. If you use a
28-day pack, the last seven pills are optional
and are included just to keep you “in the
habit” of taking a pill each day.
Most brands of pills are formulated so that
the last seven pills don’t contain active
Q
ingredients, although they may include a low
dose of iron. Some newer formulations have a
bit of estrogen in the last few pills, to reduce
side effects and to help with the adjustment
to the next full pack. Key point: the last
seven days of pills do not affect pregnancy
prevention-you can take them or trash them.
What’s the best way to get rid of hickies?
A. Time. Hope. Patience.
A hickey is a bruise caused by someone
sucking or nibbling on the skin. Skin
discoloration occurs as a result of broken
blood vessels and blood leaking into the
tissues just below the skin. Bruises can
appear if skin is injured by an overzealous
romantic partner. Women are more prone to
bruising than men. During the healing phase,
which may take 2 weeks or more, hickies
create a rainbow of colors, including blue,
purple, red, and greenish-yellow. Here are a
few tips that will help any bruise to the skin:
Protect the area from further “trauma.”
Apply ice or cold packs immediately to reduce
pain and swelling. Repeat the cold treatment
several times a day for 10 to 20 minutes
each session.
For the first 48 hours after getting the hickey,
avoid activities that may increase swelling,
such as hot showers, hot tubs, hot packs,
or alcoholic beverages.
Gently massage the hickey to increase blood
flow and relieve pain. Don’t rub the area if it
hurts too much.
Of course, you can use
makeup to help disguise
the hickey and tone down
the colors until your body
heals itself.
Have a question? Send it to sextalk@email.arizona.edu
www.health.arizona.edu
SexTalk is written by Lee Ann Hamilton, M.A., CHES, David Salafsky, MPH, and
Carrie Hardesty, BS, CHES, health educators at The UA Campus Health Service.
less stress? better grades?
less sickness? better mood?
Getting enough sleep each
night improves ability to manage
stress, boosts the immune system,
sharpens concentration and
memory for studying, and
enhances overall physical
and emotional health.
tips for better sleep
• Keep regular bedtime/
waking hours
• Exercise regularly
• Avoid caffeine and nicotine
in the evening
• Keep up with schoolwork
• Minimize sleep disruptions
with a dark, quiet bedroom
(try ear plugs and a sleep mask)
www.health.arizona.edu
injured?
Sports Medicine doctors are available to you!
Injuries can occur anywhere from participating in intramurals
to everyday mishaps. The Campus Health Service has qualified
doctors who are able to assist with your sports medicine needs.
NO HEALTH
INSURANCE
NECESSARY
BURSAR’S ACCOUNT ALWAYS ACCEPTED • Appointments: 621-9202 • www.health.arizona.edu
UATV is a student run television station dedicated
to providing its audience with programs they can’t
see anywhere else!
The University of Arizona’s only weekly magazine show
produced entirely by UA students.
Wildcast is an upbeat show created to inform the
UA community about campus news, sports, and entertainment.
WATCH US AT: UATV.ARIZONA.EDU
Monday, February 17, 2014 • Page 10
ARTS & Life
Editor: Tatiana Tomich
arts@wildcat.arizona.edu
(520) 621-3106
twitter.com/dailywildcat
Forgotten Presidential Blunders
BY kevin reagan
The Daily Wildcat
With their names and faces in libraries, schools and even the
change in our pockets, the influence of the U.S. presidents on
history is inescapable. The whole month of February is filled
with commemorations of the birth of former presidents, and
a separate day has been designated to celebrate all the leaders
who have served this country.
All this pomp may be patriotic, but presidents are still
human beings like everyone else. They’re bound to be guilty
and have a few flaws. Words like associated with presidential
scandal like “Watergate” and “Lewinsky” have tarnished the
executive branch.
In the book “Failures of the Presidents,” historians Thomas
J. Craughwell and M. William Phelps identify some of the
lesser-known mistakes made in the Oval Office. Here are five
that might make you rethink the justification for celebrating
Presidents’ Day:
Thomas jefferson
Warner Bros.
President Jimmy Carter’s decision to grant asylum to exiled Iranian shah Mohammad Reza Pahlavi may have been a diplomatic disaster, but it made for
some wonderful movie material. Best Motion Picture Winner 2013 “Argo” was based on the resulting conflict.
1) Thomas Jefferson’s Embargo Act of 1807
As Napoleon Bonaparte waged war throughout Europe in
the early 1800s, Great Britain grew more hostile toward the
revolutionized French nation. As tensions mounted between
the two countries, President Thomas Jefferson attempted to
keep the U.S. neutral. When naval ports in London and Paris
began using American merchant ships as pawns in their game,
Jefferson thought of a scheme to disassociate the country
from the conflict. The Embargo Act prevented any American
vessels from traveling to Europe to conduct trade with the two
feuding nations. In the 15 months that it was instated, the act
devastated the American economy, but aroused very little
attention from across the Atlantic. By the end of Jefferson’s
presidency, America’s exports had declined 80 percent.
grover cleveland
3) Grover Cleveland’s Pullman Strike Scandal
After being victimized by severe layoffs and wage cuts, the
employees of Pullman Palace Car Company united in a violent
revolt of protest through the streets of Chicago. This local strike
inspired the first-ever nationwide protest in America. President
Grover Cleveland was never a fan of government interfering in
the matters of business, but as reports of violence came in from
all over the country, the president had the federal courts deem
the act of striking illegal. This resulted in further hostility from
the laborers, who responded with greater acts of destruction.
On May 27, 1895, the Supreme Court justified the arrest of
Eugene Debs, the leader of the Pullman Strike, upholding the
government practice of using injunctions to break strikes in
Debs v. U.S.
franklin pierce
jimmy carter
5) Jimmy Carter’s Iranian Crisis
2) Franklin Pierce’s Repealing the Missouri Compromise
President Franklin Pierce has the distinction of being the
only elected president to be denied renomination by his own
party. In trying to annex the island of Cuba, Pierce made a
deal with a group of Southern senators to repeal the Missouri
Compromise of 1850, which prevented the practice of slavery
in some northern states. The newly conquered territories of
Kansas and Nebraska were now able to choose if they wanted
a free or slave state. Pierce’s political dealing reignited hatred
between the North and South and served as a catalyst for the
conflicts that would eventually turn into the Civil War.
President Herbert Hoover never seemed to have the favor
of the American public. His unwillingness to help 20,000
veterans in 1932 didn’t help his reputation. When Congress
passed the Adjusted Compensation Act in 1924, it granted the
gift of $500 to each veteran of World War I, though a loophole
prevented the recipients from getting their reward until 1945.
A massive group of starving, unemployed veterans descended
upon Washington, demanding their bonus money. Hoover
responded by barricading himself in the White House and
ordering the militaristic intervention of troops to remove
the veterans from the city. The president spent the rest of his
life convinced that the group, nicknamed the Bonus Army,
consisted of mostly communists and ex-convicts looking to
score some free cash.
herbert hoover
4) Herbert Hoover’s Bonus Army Debacle
When the cancer-stricken shah of Iran, Mohammad Reza
Pahlavi, asked for President Jimmy Carter’s permission to enter
the United States in 1979, Carter succumbed to his Southernbred hospitality and granted him access. An angry mob of
young Islamic revolutionaries responded to by overthrowing
the U.S. Embassy in Iran, as they saw the president’s decision
as a betrayal to Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini. The rebels took
a group of Americans hostage for next 444 days, while Carter
ordered a series of failed rescued missions. His inability to
appease both sides of the Iranian public cost him his reelection, but at least provided worthy script material for the
2012 Ben Affleck film “Argo.”
With his name forever synonymously attached to the
Depression-era shanty towns nicknamed “Hoovervilles,”
— Follow Kevin Reagan @
KevinReaganUA
Controversy taints
Woody Allen’s
Oscar nominations
mental state in the aftermath of abuse.
On Feb. 7, Allen published a rebuttal
op-ed in the same publication. He writes
enowned filmmaker Woody Allen,
that the 1993 accusation was nothing
whose movie “Blue Jasmine” is up
more than a ploy to gain leverage in the
for multiple Oscars this year, has
custody trial. Allen accuses Mia Farrow of
found himself caught in a controversy.
brainwashing Dylan Farrow, intentionally
On Feb. 1, “An Open Letter From Dylan
hurting her to get back at him and tarnish
Farrow” was published in the New York
his image. He quotes Moses Farrow, Dylan
Times. Dylan Farrow was adopted by
Farrow’s brother, as having said, “Knowing
Allen and Mia Farrow, who were in a
that my mother often used us as pawns,
relationship for more than a decade. In
I cannot trust anything that is said or
the early ’90s, Allen and Mia Farrow split
written from anyone in the family.”
after it was revealed that the 56-year“Blue Jasmine” has earned Allen a
old Allen was having an affair with Mia
nomination
for Best Screenplay,
Farrow’s adopted daughter, Soon-Yi
while
Cate Blanchett and
Previn. Previn and Allen continued their
Sally Hawkins are
relationship and have been
nominees in the
married since 1997.
Best Actress and
In 1993, amidst a very
Best Supporting
public child-custody
Actress categories,
trial, an accusation was
respectively.
made against the critically
In Dylan
acclaimed filmmaker:
Farrow’s letter, she
Mia Farrow claimed that
specifically called
mine
PG-13 Blue Jas
Allen, then in his late
out Blanchett,
50s, had sexually abused
among others,
.
in
m
Dylan Farrow, age 7. The
for continuing
un Time: 98
R
resulting scandal filled the
to work with her
headlines. The public’s
s
ic
s
father. Based on
s
la
C
y
Son
positive perception of Allen
her performance,
has taken a hit throughout
Blanchett has
the years, but charges were
been thought of
never officially filed.
as the runaway favorite in her category,
“An Open Letter From Dylan Farrow”
but Dylan Farrow has put Oscar voters
published by Nicholas Kristof, was the first in a moral predicament. If they vote for
time that Dylan Farrow has written about
“Blue Jasmine” in any capacity, are they
the alleged abuse. Her op-ed is horrifying,
turning a blind eye to Allen’s personal life
as she details being molested by Allen in
or simply rewarding good performance?
the family attic. She paints a nightmare,
Does guilt by association apply here to
describing not only multiple acts of
somebody like Blanchett, who has never
inappropriate sexual behavior performed
been a part of any other scandals in her
on her by Allen, but also her broken
career?
BY Taylor Armosino
The Daily Wildcat
R
Perdido Productions
Cate Blanchett is up for Best Actress for playing the lead role in the Oscar-nominated Woody Allen Film “Blue Jasmine”.
The Academy is no stranger to
controversy. Last year, “Zero Dark Thirty”
was nominated in multiple categories,
but was shut out of the major ones amid
fierce political backlash pertaining to its
depiction of torture. In 2003, the Academy
awarded Best Director to convicted
child-rapist Roman Polanski, as well as
Best Picture to the film he directed, “The
Pianist.”
Polanski’s victory might suggest that
Allen, who has never been charged with,
much less convicted of, sexual abuse and
his counterparts will get a fair shake, but
the Academy is hardly predictable in its
voting. The expansion of social media will
make any potential backlash that much
louder. The field of nominees is generally
strong across the board and it won’t be a
travesty if “Blue Jasmine” doesn’t earn an
Oscar.
For all the Oscar talk, award shows are
hardly the important part of this story.
There is a family fractured and broken.
There will likely never be any resolution.
And every time Allen makes a new film or
does anything notable, it can be assumed
that this story will re-surface.
— Follow Taylor Armosino @
Tarmosinow